Tag Archives: film

So What if I Learned This From a Movie Trailer (04/29)

I saw a preview for the movie, Music Within, which is based on the true story of Richard Pimentel, the man who is credited with championed the Americans with Disabilities Act, into becoming law.

Pimentel

Here is summary of his life story as found on www.miltwright.com:

Richard Pimentel was pronounced dead at birth in the delivery room. In a miraculous turn of events, he lived. His mother, who had experienced three miscarriages before his birth, left him in an orphanage, unable to come to terms with his existence. After his father’s death, he was raised by his impoverished grandmother and deemed “retarded” by a school guidance counselor. He never spoke a word until age six.

After his mother abandoned him again for a new boyfriend, Richard was left homeless and roamed from friend’s homes to his father’s old workplace, a strip bar. He lived and slept in the dressing room. During these hard times, he managed to win two national high school speech championships and was offered a college scholarship by College Bowl founder, Dr. Ben Padrow. Richard arrived on campus only to hear Dr. Padrow tell him to come back when he had “something to say.”

Richard followed Dr. Padrow’s advice and quit school. Soon after he was drafted to Vietnam, where he survived a volunteer suicide mission and became an acknowledged war hero. During his brief celebration, a stray bomb exploded in his bunker and ravaged his hearing. Not only did Richard lose his hearing, he developed tinnitus, a constant ringing in the ears. The government dismissed his dreams of college and public speaking, insisting his fate was one of insanity and rage due to his condition.

Richard refused to accept this fate. He returned to college where he met Art Honneyman, “the smartest and funniest man he has ever known,” who just happened to have a severe case of cerebral palsy. No one could understand Art due to his wheezing, garbled speech—-except for Richard, who could hear Art’s true voice due to his hearing loss.

At 3 AM, in celebration of Art’s birthday, Art and Richard sat down in a local restaurant for a pancake breakfast. Their waitress threatened to call the police, deeming him the “ugliest, most disgusting thing” she had ever seen. They refused to leave and were arrested under the “Ugly Law,” a statute that prohibited public appearances of people who were “unsightly.” This injustice propelled Richard, with the help of Dr. Padrow and a host of friends, headlong into the nascent disability movement

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Alfred Hitchcock (03/26)

key_art_alfred_hitchcock_presentsAlfred Hitchcock was originally a draftsman/advertising designer for  a cable company, he then became interested in photography and broke  into the movie industry by designing the titles for silent movies.

It  only took 5 years from the time he started as a title designer to  become a film director.

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Missing Something? (03/14)

Although he ranks alongside Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton as one of the most popular and influential film comedians of the silent film era – he was always less known to me – the man I am talking about is Harold Lloyd.

Harold Lloyd as his "glasses character"

Harold Lloyd as his "Glasses Character"

Harold Lloyd was a brilliant comedian, superb athlete, and daredevil who did most of his own stunts even after a 1919 accident…

On a Sunday in August of 1919, Harold posed for a photographer. The set-up called for him to light a cigarette with a prop bomb — the round, black, type you might see in the cartoons. The bomb wasn’t a prop at all; it exploded in his hand. It ripped open the sixteen-foot ceiling and left Harold blind and with most of his right hand missing. Doctors told him he would never see again. His career was over.

But the doctors were wrong. Eventually, his sight did return, the scars healed, and a glove was crafted to hide his handicap from his public. The comedian, known for doing all his own daredevil stunts, felt his audience would be concerned for his safety and not laugh at the movie if they knew about his injury. So he wore the glove in every movie he ever made after the accident.

(from the official website of Harold Lloyd)

If have ever seen his 1923 movie Safety Last! you will find it hard to believe all of the stunts that he accomplished with a prosthetic hand.

Safety First!

Safety First!

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Samurais (03/07)

This Samurai character:

John Belushi

John Belushi on SNL

Is based on this Samurai character:

Toshirô Mifune in Sanjuro

Toshirô Mifune in Sanjuro

But wait, there  is more..

The masterless samurai Sanjuro appears in 2 of Akira Kirusawa’s films: Yojimbo and Sanjuro.

Kirusawa used the American genre of westerns for these films, but set them in feudal Japan.

Then Yojimbo was remade (into a western) by Sergio Leone as A Fistful of Dollars, starring an American “masterless samurai”, Clint Eastwood.

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The Evolution of Skippy’s (02/07)

1923

the comic strip

the comic strip

Skippy was an American comic strip written and drawn by Percy Crosby that ran from 1923 to 1945. A highly popular, acclaimed and influential feature about rambunctious fifth-grader Skippy Skinner, his friends and his enemies.

1931

the movie

the movie

Skippy is one of the first films nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, in 1931. The screenplay by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Don Marquis, Norman Z. McLeod, and Sam Mintz was based on the comic strip Skippy by Percy Crosby.

1933

the peanut butter

the peanut butter

10 years after Joseph Rosefield perfects a process to prevent oil separation in peanut butter, his packing company uses Skippy as a trademark for peanut butter. One of the many items in the Skippy franchise.

1982

the neighbor

the neighbor

OK – the last one is not related to the other Skippy products. Or to the Keaton’s for that matter.

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Frank Booth & Anthrax (01/17)

Growing up I followed the top 40 more so than heavy metal, so it’s not too suprising that I missed this one. I learned this tidbit from some one very close to me:

The following Anthrax song is comprised of things that Dennis Hopper’s character Frank Booth said in David Lynch’s film Blue Velvet. In order to help jog your memory of both the film and song I have included lyrics and clips from the film.

Now It’s Dark :
In dreams I can rule your life
With me nothing’s ever right
Sing for me up on a stage
Keep your mind trapped in a cage
I’m your man I’m what you need
Dance with me but never lead
One deep breath will set me free

dont-you-fucking-look3

You know that I am…

One fuckin’ well dressed man!

now-its-dark21
but I can see
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me
Now it’s dark, your gonna be
Exactly what I want to see
Now it’s dark, Mommy
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me

A sensation
Of elation
Intoxication
Now it’s dark

A candy coated existence
Underneath is decadence
What was hidden you have found
Made it your own battleground
Pretty, pretty don’t say please
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me
You know that I am…

well-dressed1

Now it’s dark, but I can see
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me
Now it’s dark, your gonna be
Exactly what I want to see
Now it’s dark, Mommy
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me

love-letter
Straight from the bottom of my heart
fucked-forever
The candy coated clown’s done his part

I’m your man I’m what you need
Dance with me but never lead
One deep breath will set me free
Don’t you fuckin’ look at me
You know that I am…

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